The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 12, 1951, Page 2

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PAGE TWO LA A AV Five Fat Jersey Joe, Charles in Games for yerhal Battle Rainiers - oo | will meet Charles her July pion i over Jersey By Associated Press Pagific Coast League ballpar dark tonight while th vel, and ex lon 10 Seattle fer s can | had probably use r wo The Raini r pack by f their Francisco, are showing no sign let-up. To mak ters evel more-pleasant, perhaps, for Horns by's=Horrors, they play the Seal again starting Friday, this time Walc enough the of robbed of when be tt laid off a sparring the been occast five ucce: aiten him twi fore and n trouble and had him ful invasion of Se ms Seattle. NEW YORK York City is nof hotel. le dusted off San terday to win four games in | eries of five. Marv Grissom league's winningest flinger cked up No. 14 for the season via eight hitter e secona place Hollywood Start behind by suc ing to Portland, 3 The B came from behind to win it in the cighth on a rally launched by Joe rovia’s 22nd homer of the year Shcramento maintained its pre- carfous perch in third place by goose egging Los Angeles, 2-0. I took the Solon’s pitcher, Glenn liotf, just one hour and 27 minute to ¢omplete his four hitter before crowd of only 1,310 Sén Diego’s Bob K cranked up a 2-0 the: fourth place Oakl on another four hitter fell five game wver Los Angele Portland B San Francisco San Diego 44 NATIONAL LEAGUE Brooklyn New York St. Louis nati beatin adelphia nd Boston Acorns hicago Pittsburgh WILGAMES | Boston New York Cleveland | Detroit 44 AMERICAN LEAGUE 628 618 | 608 | 579 AT2 413 120 By Associated Press Yesterday's Results Vancouver 5, Salem 2 Yakima 8, Tacoma 4 Majors Back In Adion By Associated Press Major league baseball, after tak- ing time out for three days to settle the annual All-Star game, swings back into action today with most of the interest centered on four teams battling for the American League lead The next two weeks in the Ameri- can race will go a long way toward settling the pennant, and the Chi cago White Sox, Boston Red Sox, New York Yankees and Cleveland Indians well know it Boston, one game back of the leading White Sox, tackles Chicago in the main dish as hostilities re- sume with a twi-night double- header at Comiskey Park. Chicago has a 14-game home stand, meeting western tour The other top drawer attraction is a night game at Cleveland, where the New York Yankees hope to get back on the victory trail after their disastrous experience at Boston where they dropped three straight last weekend. New York is two games behind Chicago, while the Indians are four. Meanwhile, the high-stepping Brooklyn Dodgers, riding on an 8': game edge over the second place New York ‘Giants in the National loop, open a 12-game home stand. The Chicago Cubs, beaten seven times in 11 games this year by the Bum$, start the Ebbets Field festiv- ities tonight. Over mn e Poio Grounds, the Giants are prepared to defend their second place against the St. Louis Cardinals in an afternoon encounter. The Cards are in third, one game back of the Giants. Boston's Red Sox, moving at a torrid clip of late, plan to send Mel Parnell (10-5) and Leo Kieley (1-0) against the White Sox in the first game of their four-game series. The teams clash again Friday night and Saturday afternoon. Chicago has Saul Rogovin (5-4) and Joe Dobson (6-3) ready to shoot at Boston, and the management looks for a crowd of some 50,000 for the opening fire- ; works. The White Sox have won 7 of 11 games from Boston this year, four | Washington ) Philadelphia St. Louis Wenatchee 7, Victoria 1. Spokane 7, Tri-City 1 31| 207 | out of five in Comiskey Park. Allie Reynolds (9-5) is the Yankee B Rehends Co QUALITY SINCE /887 G all four of the eastern clubs on their | THE DAILY ALASKA LMPI Gian B-36s | ‘Number Only 87; ‘May Be’ Obsolete | "WASHINGTON, July 12 — | Some House members were repo: Lgreatly surprised today at tc {mony that the nation’s fleet | giant B36 bombers numbers on! and may already be obsolete. Legislators said Air Force | clals testified at a closed session ithe Armed Services committee ! terday that it has just 87 of ¢ | huge intercontinental bombers re: | to strike atomic counterblow ! event of war. Some House members had app ently believed the number ran i several hundred. An Air Force fieial was quoted as saying anotii 6 are in the process of being m ernized for jet-assisted takeoff The Air Force said it had order or received delivery of a total 170 B-36s. Deliveries were halted f a time to change over from piston type engines to a combir tion of four jet and six piston ¢ gines. Other committee members, asking not to be named, said curr model atom bombs may be consid- erably smaller — although more powerful — than the bulky model used in World War II. If that is true, they speculatetl smaller and less expensive p than the $3,500,000 B-36s might & used to deliver the bombs, The B-36 went into production i 1941. | TIDE TABLES | July 13 Low tide | High tide Low tide High tide 29 am. 132 am :14 p.m. 136 p.m 8 2 8 hurling choice against the Indians’ Bobby Feller (12-2). New York's pitching staff is shaky, and the once great Joe DiMaggion is riding the bench with torn tendons behind his left knee. Joe was forced to skip the All-Star game, and may be out 10 days or more. | The Indians and Yankees have | played 11 games this year, and ! Cleveland has won eight. style NARROLINE slims you above the waist, too. Satin, eno and satin elastic, white and blush, 14 and 16 inch lengths. $10.95 RE—JUNEAU, ALASKA Slugfest Promised af Garden V. )V YORK, July 12 —(#— Rex e and Rocky Marciano, each peful of injecting young blood into heavyweight championship pic- trade punches tonight in what to be 10 rounds or less of gging at MadisonsSquare shot at the heavyweight title its the winner. And the men who ke the betting odds figure it'll be 1e. He is the 8'2 to 5 ghoice. The 23-year-old Layne, fistic ride of the Rockies from Lewiston, he likeable quiet 26-year- no from Brockton, Mass most identical records. FISHING OPENS ON . 3-DAY SCHEDULE IN YAKUTAT AREA hing in the Situk river, Ahrnk- and Lost River in the area, is being opened for a ree-day-a-week period after be- closed since June 25, it was an- nced by Richard Shuman of Open periods will be from 6 am. on Tuesdays until 6 p. m. each Thursday. LUMBERMAN HERE Freeman Butler, with the Juncau r Co. at Seattle, is stopping > Gastineau hotel. Just Arrived... 1951 AMBASSADOR POPULAR MODEL ENGLISH MOTORCYCEE Rugged Construction . . . 100 Miles per Gailon 8% h.p. Villiers Engine THE FINEST VALUE ON TWO WHEELS IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Now on display at . .. ALASKA RADIO SUPPLY 307 Seward St. | | | planned. Race Drivers’ Feud j Causes Near Riof i On Seattle Track ; | SEATTLE, July 12 —(P— A near- | riot broke out at the Aurora Stad- | ium speedway north of Seattle after the final race last night. Sheriff’s deputies had to rescue Allen Health, automobile race driver, from an angry crowd of some 2,000 persons who swarmed onto the track. Spectators became aroused when Bob Stonecipher, another driver forced Heath's car into the infield near the end of the last race. Dep- uty Sheriff Don Armeni said Heath's attempt to retaliate on the next lap thoroughly displeased the crowd. The five deputies on duty were inable to handle the crowd and 10 rthers were dispatched to the track Heath was taken from the track in a sheriff’s car. . VISITING HERE Adam Freise, father of Stanley Freise of the Office of Price Admin- istration; is in Juneau visiting hie son and family for a few weeks. He is a veteran employe of the U. S Plywood Co. of Seattle. While here many fishing trips are being ATTENTION LIONS CLUB | Annual Lions Club picnic, 6:30 p.m. Monday, July 16 at Douglas Beach. Everything furnished. No meeting Monday noon. 858-1t —— Phone 62 Step in and inguire about a demonstration ride. NARROLINE slip-on of inch lengths. Crewman Lost In Long Yacht Race HONOLULU, July 12 —®— U. 8. Navy ships continued today an al- most hopeless search for a crewman who toppled yesterday from the second place sloop in the 2,225-mile Los Angeles-to-Honolulu yacht race. Crewman Ted Sierks of Avalon, Calif., fell overboard from the 72- foot sloop L’Apache some 820 miles nertheast of Honolulu. L'Apache is swned and skippered by Phyllis B. 8runson of Hollywood, only woman skipper in the race. L'Apache was about 105 miles be- 1nd the leader, Dick Rheem’s 97- foot schooner, Morning Star, of Los Angeles. Morning Star was speeding at a clip’ that could break her own 1949 record for the crossing. ~EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY— THURSDAY, JULY 12, 1951 Olympic Tryout | Stars Smother French Athletes PARIS, July 12 —/®— American track and field stars, giving a dem- onstration of what they hope to ac-' complish in the Olympic games next| | year at Helsinki, have scored an-| other one-sided victory here. | The touring Americans captured | | 8 of 13 events in competition with | French athletes. They had beaten the Frenchmen by almost the same | margin Sunday. WAUNALEE SUESS HERE i Miss Waunalee Suess, daughter |of Robert Coughlin, , has arnvedl here to spend her summer vaca-. tion. During the past several years she has been teaching primary grades in California and Oregon schools, i Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Martin of Pt Barrow are guests at the Baranof hotel. is a straight bourbon xciting as 'vfifinhig: : a beauty contest— thrilleg as making the fist of America’s ten best dressed women*— . that's NARROLINE, a Fashion Academy Award Gossard. Look for the narrow panel over each hip, that does v ' the slimming trick as no other girdle design can. Here we show NARROLINE with rounded and plunged FLAIR bras, in again smart, always bewitching black and perennially - pretty white. Selected annually by the Fashion Academy . .. famed New Yark sehool of doelall* elegant in taste, uncommonly good «..a Hiram Walker Whiskey. Hiram Walker & Sons Inc., Peoria, I11. 86 proof. De Luxe: specially elegant s o o URCOMMON. WEBSTER whiskey, body...easy on the eyes Look Gold for The Fashion Academy Medal on all lovely Gossards + . . awarded for *exquisite design and outstanding White or black. fashion appeal.® gossamer powernet and satin elastic. 14 and 16 $9.95 Plunged FLAIR bra for a rounded bosom. Satin, with lace. A, B, C cups. White or black. $4.00

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